So when I cast my eyes on the first images from the launch of Google Street View in Germany, I find myself more entranced than by anything that, say, Dale Chihuly might have mustered.

You see, recently Google deigned to allow Germans to remove their homes from Street View. And when the service launched today in the land of always beautiful bratwurst and suddenly attractive soccer some of the images were powerful indeed.

There are many people who have wandered through Bavaria and discovered their vision to be increasingly blurred, especially in October. However, these vast Street View blurrings remind one of Christo's work on the Reichstag (and, most certainly, not with AT&T).

Inadvertently, Google and the German people have created a significant art form, one that can surely only spread beyond German borders. I can see residents of so many parts of the world asking Google to create ever more interesting blurry shapes around their own houses, so that these stand out from the other blurry houses in their neighborhood.

I see requests for colors. I see requests for stars, stripes, hammers, sickles, initials, Masonic symbols, images of favorite sports stars and even personal logos over the blurriness. I see people trying to sell ad space on their blurred out Street View house.

To some, having almost 3 percent of the houses on German Street View completely blurred out might seem like an indictment of Google's service. I see an entirely new form of imagery being created, one which will, in some distant future, deserve an exhibition at the Guggenheim.

About the author

Chris Matyszczyk is an award-winning creative director who advises major corporations on content creation and marketing. He brings an irreverent, sarcastic, and sometimes ironic voice to the tech world.
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